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Discovering Earth’s History
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Discovering Earth’s History Rocks Record Earth’s History 1. Rocks record geological events and changing life forms of the past. 2.Scientists have learned.

Dec 30, 2015

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Basil Dean
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Page 1: Discovering Earth’s History Rocks Record Earth’s History 1. Rocks record geological events and changing life forms of the past. 2.Scientists have learned.

Discovering Earth’s History

Page 2: Discovering Earth’s History Rocks Record Earth’s History 1. Rocks record geological events and changing life forms of the past. 2.Scientists have learned.

Rocks Record Earth’s History

1. Rocks record geological events and changing life forms of the past.

2. Scientists have learned that the Earth is much older than previously thought and the Earth’s surface and interior have been changed by the same geological processes that go on today.

Page 3: Discovering Earth’s History Rocks Record Earth’s History 1. Rocks record geological events and changing life forms of the past. 2.Scientists have learned.

A Brief History of Geology

1. In the mid 1600’s James Ussher made a timeline of both human and Earth history and determined the Earth was more than 5,000 years old.

Page 4: Discovering Earth’s History Rocks Record Earth’s History 1. Rocks record geological events and changing life forms of the past. 2.Scientists have learned.

2. In the late 1700’s, James Hutton, a Scottish physician, published a book called Theory of the Earth and established the principle of uniformitarianism.

Page 5: Discovering Earth’s History Rocks Record Earth’s History 1. Rocks record geological events and changing life forms of the past. 2.Scientists have learned.

Uniformitarianism means that the forces and processes that have shaped Earth in the past are essentially the same as those operating today.

Page 6: Discovering Earth’s History Rocks Record Earth’s History 1. Rocks record geological events and changing life forms of the past. 2.Scientists have learned.

Relative Dating - Key Principles

1. Relative dating is a process by which rocks are placed in their proper sequence or order. Only the chronological order of events are determined, not the absolute age in years.

Page 7: Discovering Earth’s History Rocks Record Earth’s History 1. Rocks record geological events and changing life forms of the past. 2.Scientists have learned.

2. Nicolaus Steno proposed the Law of Superposition which states in an undeformed sequence of sedimentary rocks, each layer is older than the one above it and younger than the layer below it.

A

B

C

D Oldest

Youngest

Page 8: Discovering Earth’s History Rocks Record Earth’s History 1. Rocks record geological events and changing life forms of the past. 2.Scientists have learned.

3. Steno also posed the Principle of Original Horizontality which says the layers of sediment are generally deposited in a horizontal position.

Page 9: Discovering Earth’s History Rocks Record Earth’s History 1. Rocks record geological events and changing life forms of the past. 2.Scientists have learned.

Original Horizontality

Page 10: Discovering Earth’s History Rocks Record Earth’s History 1. Rocks record geological events and changing life forms of the past. 2.Scientists have learned.
Page 11: Discovering Earth’s History Rocks Record Earth’s History 1. Rocks record geological events and changing life forms of the past. 2.Scientists have learned.

4. The Principle of Cross-Cutting Relationships states that a rock or fault is younger than any rock or fault through which it cuts.

Page 12: Discovering Earth’s History Rocks Record Earth’s History 1. Rocks record geological events and changing life forms of the past. 2.Scientists have learned.

inclusion is any material that is trapped inside a mineral during its formation.

fragments included in a host rock are older than the host rock itself.

Quartz Crystal with Sand Inclusions

Page 13: Discovering Earth’s History Rocks Record Earth’s History 1. Rocks record geological events and changing life forms of the past. 2.Scientists have learned.

5. No place on Earth is geologically complete. Unconformities are surfaces that represent a break in the rock record, caused by erosion or lack of deposition.

Page 14: Discovering Earth’s History Rocks Record Earth’s History 1. Rocks record geological events and changing life forms of the past. 2.Scientists have learned.

Correlation of Rock Layers

1. To develop a geologic time scale that can be applied to the entire Earth, rocks of similar age in different regions must be matched up- a task called correlation.

2. By correlating rocks, it is possible to create a more complete view of the geologic history of the region.

Page 15: Discovering Earth’s History Rocks Record Earth’s History 1. Rocks record geological events and changing life forms of the past. 2.Scientists have learned.

Angular Unconformity• The boundary

between the tilted layers and the horizontal layer.

Page 16: Discovering Earth’s History Rocks Record Earth’s History 1. Rocks record geological events and changing life forms of the past. 2.Scientists have learned.
Page 17: Discovering Earth’s History Rocks Record Earth’s History 1. Rocks record geological events and changing life forms of the past. 2.Scientists have learned.

Disconformity• The boundary

between the older, eroded surface and the younger, overlying layers.

Page 18: Discovering Earth’s History Rocks Record Earth’s History 1. Rocks record geological events and changing life forms of the past. 2.Scientists have learned.
Page 19: Discovering Earth’s History Rocks Record Earth’s History 1. Rocks record geological events and changing life forms of the past. 2.Scientists have learned.

Nonconformity• Stratified rock

rests upon unstratified rock.

Page 20: Discovering Earth’s History Rocks Record Earth’s History 1. Rocks record geological events and changing life forms of the past. 2.Scientists have learned.
Page 21: Discovering Earth’s History Rocks Record Earth’s History 1. Rocks record geological events and changing life forms of the past. 2.Scientists have learned.